May 2021
A newsletter for students, faculty, staff, alumni and friends
A small step back toward normality Class of 2021’s rite of passage guided by pandemic protocols Graduation exercises returned to the University of Maryland Eastern Shore’s William P. Hytche Athletic Center May 14 after a year’s hiatus. The university awarded 284 degrees in a “modified, in-person” ceremony and a smaller, more intimate crowd to adhere to COVID-19 prevention protocols. UMES navigated the 2020-21 academic year without halting classes or closing, thanks to a robust virus-testing program and a hybrid class schedule that blended in-person and online instruction. UMES held two “virtual” graduation ceremonies in 2020. Earning a UMES degree takes perseverance, and the Class of 2021 added resilience to the equation. Melody J. Newman, an outgoing 30-yearold originally from Baltimore, toiled off and on for more than a decade to complete work on her undergraduate degree in English. “It brought tears to my eyes to find
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Boren Fellowship Recipient
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Hard Hat Ceremony at UMES
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Social Justice Event Graduation cont.
out we were going to have an in-person commencement,” Newman said. “I am fully prepared to take on the world and whatever I have coming next.” Angelica Maria Garcia (top right) of El Monte, Calif., the first in her family to graduate from college, earned her bachelor’s degree in applied design with a concentration in commercial photography. Cheered on by her adult daughter, Garcia, 48, wants “to tell people’s stories visually.” She’s among 11 people offered a coveted spot in a graduate program at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico. “I’m not only an artist,” she said, “I want to be an activist, too.” Zachary J. Seiler of Stevensville, Md., has a job lined up after receiving his bachelor’s degree in aviation science. He’s headed to New London, Conn. where he’ll enter officer candidate school with a goal of flying U.S. Coast Guard helicopters. “I’ve had an awesome experience here
Page 5 Student Perspective
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Beautification at UMES
– nothing but good things to say about the university,” said Seiler, a member of the Richard A. Henson Honors Program who graduated with “highest honors.” Gabrielle Christian (page 4) of Elkridge, Md., a community college transfer student who made the UMES dean’s list, delivered the student commentary.
“I did not give up on myself when I did not go to (a four-year) college straight out of high school,” the hospitalitytourism management major said, adding “I was able to grow as a person by attending UMES.” She said she auditioned to speak at commencement because she thought would resonate with peers “to keep following their dreams.” The first graduate to accept a degree grew up on the campus and crossed the stage in a building bearing her late
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Creative Writing
Teachers of Promise Faculty/Staff News
CLASS OF 2021 / continued on page 4
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Remembering Jesse T. Williams
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Family Affair